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554 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Bjørn Erik Pedersen
80230f26a3
Add support for theme composition and inheritance
This commit adds support for theme composition and inheritance in Hugo.

With this, it helps thinking about a theme as a set of ordered components:

```toml
theme = ["my-shortcodes", "base-theme", "hyde"]
```

The theme definition example above in `config.toml` creates a theme with the 3 components with presedence from left to right.

So, Hugo will, for any given file, data entry etc., look first in the project, and then in `my-shortcode`, `base-theme` and lastly `hyde`.

Hugo uses two different algorithms to merge the filesystems, depending on the file type:

* For `i18n` and `data` files, Hugo merges deeply using the translation id and data key inside the files.
* For `static`, `layouts` (templates) and `archetypes` files, these are merged on file level. So the left-most file will be chosen.

The name used in the `theme` definition above must match a folder in `/your-site/themes`, e.g. `/your-site/themes/my-shortcodes`. There are  plans to improve on this and get a URL scheme so this can be resolved automatically.

Also note that a component that is part of a theme can have its own configuration file, e.g. `config.toml`. There are currently some restrictions to what a theme component can configure:

* `params` (global and per language)
* `menu` (global and per language)
* `outputformats` and `mediatypes`

The same rules apply here: The left-most param/menu etc. with the same ID will win. There are some hidden and experimental namespace support in the above, which we will work to improve in the future, but theme authors are encouraged to create their own namespaces to avoid naming conflicts.

A final note: Themes/components can also have a `theme` definition in their `config.toml` and similar, which is the "inheritance" part of this commit's title. This is currently not supported by the Hugo theme site. We will have to wait for some "auto dependency" feature to be implemented for that to happen, but this can be a powerful feature if you want to create your own theme-variant based on others.

Fixes #4460
Fixes #4450
2018-06-10 23:55:20 +02:00
Bjørn Erik Pedersen
eb42774e58
Add support for a content dir set per language
A sample config:

```toml
defaultContentLanguage = "en"
defaultContentLanguageInSubdir = true

[Languages]
[Languages.en]
weight = 10
title = "In English"
languageName = "English"
contentDir = "content/english"

[Languages.nn]
weight = 20
title = "På Norsk"
languageName = "Norsk"
contentDir = "content/norwegian"
```

The value of `contentDir` can be any valid path, even absolute path references. The only restriction is that the content dirs cannot overlap.

The content files will be assigned a language by

1. The placement: `content/norwegian/post/my-post.md` will be read as Norwegian content.
2. The filename: `content/english/post/my-post.nn.md` will be read as Norwegian even if it lives in the English content folder.

The content directories will be merged into a big virtual filesystem with one simple rule: The most specific language file will win.
This means that if both `content/norwegian/post/my-post.md` and `content/english/post/my-post.nn.md` exists, they will be considered duplicates and the version inside `content/norwegian` will win.

Note that translations will be automatically assigned by Hugo by the content file's relative placement, so `content/norwegian/post/my-post.md` will be a translation of `content/english/post/my-post.md`.

If this does not work for you, you can connect the translations together by setting a `translationKey` in the content files' front matter.

Fixes #4523
Fixes #4552
Fixes #4553
2018-04-02 08:06:21 +02:00
Bjørn Erik Pedersen
60bd332c1f Only re-render the view(s) you're working on
Hugo already, in its server mode,  support partial rebuilds. To put it simply: If you change `about.md`, only that content page is read and processed, then Hugo does some processing (taxonomies etc.) and the full site is rendered.
This commit covers the rendering part: We now only re-render the pages you work on, i.e. the last n pages you watched in the browser (which obviously also includes the  page in the example above).

To be more specific: When you are running the hugo server in watch (aka. livereload) mode, and change a template or a content file, then we do a partial re-rendering of the following:

* The current content page (if it is a content change)
* The home page
* Up to the last 10 pages you visited on the site.

This should in most cases be enough, but if you navigate to something completely different, you may see stale content. Doing an edit will then refresh that page.

Note that this feature is enabled by default. To turn it off, run `hugo server --disableFastRender`.

Fixes #3962
See  #1643
2017-10-14 13:40:43 +02:00
Bjørn Erik Pedersen
3b4f17bbc9 hugolib: Implement "related content"
This closes #98, even if this commit does not do full content text search.

We may revisit that problem in the future, but that deserves its own issue.

Fixes #98
2017-09-06 00:20:02 +02:00